Dilemmatic Grammar
Posted: Sun Jun 12, 2005 4:21 pm
Hello
I know that I’m not in the right place since the topic I want to write about is strictly speaking not Applied Linguistics.
I also know that I’m at the best place since the topic I want to write about is a distant relative of Applied Linguistics, and as far as I know, you are the most active Forum at this site, with a great deal of open criticism I don’t mind, and I do need.
I’m Leslie Simonfalvi, director of the International Teacher Training & Development College in Budapest, Hungary. We teach English for Speakers of Other Languages, teach several subjects in English, and train teachers to do the same.
My main field of interest is teaching the LD Student [Learning Disability – Learning Difficulty – Learning Difference], the Concrete Child, the Asperger [Geek] Syndrome Student, and / or the Semantic – Pragmatic Disorder Student, in lessons of therapeutic value, and most importantly, integrated among the ‘normal’ students.
We also train teachers to do the same.
The ‘difficult’ students learn English, and they also learn how to integrate themselves into a ‘normal’ society.
The ‘normal’ students learn English, and they also learn how to integrate ‘difficult’ mates into their ‘normal’ society.
If you teach a class or two like this, you have to forget all about the Prescriptive Grammar, the sooner the better. All Grammar Dogmata would do a lot of harm, and most definitely more harm than good.
For at least two decades I’ve been searching for a real Pedagogic Grammar that would serve the purposes of such a course but so far in vain. Bits and pieces are there but a coherent course is really hard to find.
Because of this, I have been simply forced to create quite a lot of materials that are tailor-made for this learning community. It belongs to the domain of Ortho-Grammar since the Grammar included is only and only a tool, and by no means an aim of the learning. It is the road rather than the destination.
In this Grammar I hardly state anything after creating the Conceptual Framework. When we have the CF, I simply ask hundreds of questions and the questions help the Students concentrate and focus on the MEANING before the FORM by which we express that meaning. Of course we need them both but in this order.
The title of this programme is Dilemmatic Grammar http://ilsgroup.blogspot.com/ because of the extensive use of questions. Most of it is more for the teacher than for the students, and with the help of the insight we gained through it, we’ve been better able to explain quite a lot of things to serve the Students’ 3D comprehension, i. e. deep and high, and wide, and long.
If you know it less than I do, I’m quite happy to help you learn it.
If you know something better than I do, I will provoke you into writing a better programme, and I will be happy to learn it from you.
It is quite a lot and it may take a year or so to upload it to the InterNet in many steps, but there is enough up there already for a first impression.
Best wishes.
Leslie Simonfalvi
I know that I’m not in the right place since the topic I want to write about is strictly speaking not Applied Linguistics.
I also know that I’m at the best place since the topic I want to write about is a distant relative of Applied Linguistics, and as far as I know, you are the most active Forum at this site, with a great deal of open criticism I don’t mind, and I do need.
I’m Leslie Simonfalvi, director of the International Teacher Training & Development College in Budapest, Hungary. We teach English for Speakers of Other Languages, teach several subjects in English, and train teachers to do the same.
My main field of interest is teaching the LD Student [Learning Disability – Learning Difficulty – Learning Difference], the Concrete Child, the Asperger [Geek] Syndrome Student, and / or the Semantic – Pragmatic Disorder Student, in lessons of therapeutic value, and most importantly, integrated among the ‘normal’ students.
We also train teachers to do the same.
The ‘difficult’ students learn English, and they also learn how to integrate themselves into a ‘normal’ society.
The ‘normal’ students learn English, and they also learn how to integrate ‘difficult’ mates into their ‘normal’ society.
If you teach a class or two like this, you have to forget all about the Prescriptive Grammar, the sooner the better. All Grammar Dogmata would do a lot of harm, and most definitely more harm than good.
For at least two decades I’ve been searching for a real Pedagogic Grammar that would serve the purposes of such a course but so far in vain. Bits and pieces are there but a coherent course is really hard to find.
Because of this, I have been simply forced to create quite a lot of materials that are tailor-made for this learning community. It belongs to the domain of Ortho-Grammar since the Grammar included is only and only a tool, and by no means an aim of the learning. It is the road rather than the destination.
In this Grammar I hardly state anything after creating the Conceptual Framework. When we have the CF, I simply ask hundreds of questions and the questions help the Students concentrate and focus on the MEANING before the FORM by which we express that meaning. Of course we need them both but in this order.
The title of this programme is Dilemmatic Grammar http://ilsgroup.blogspot.com/ because of the extensive use of questions. Most of it is more for the teacher than for the students, and with the help of the insight we gained through it, we’ve been better able to explain quite a lot of things to serve the Students’ 3D comprehension, i. e. deep and high, and wide, and long.
If you know it less than I do, I’m quite happy to help you learn it.
If you know something better than I do, I will provoke you into writing a better programme, and I will be happy to learn it from you.
It is quite a lot and it may take a year or so to upload it to the InterNet in many steps, but there is enough up there already for a first impression.
Best wishes.
Leslie Simonfalvi